23 March,2023 07:47 AM IST | Basel | PTI
India shuttler Lakshya Sen
Commonwealth Games champion Lakshya Sen's woeful run continued as he made a first round exit at the Swiss Open badminton tournament, even as senior compatriot Kidambi Srikanth progressed to the next round of the BWF World Tour Super 300 event, here on Wednesday.
The 2021 World Championships silver medallist Srikanth had to dig deep to get the better of China's Weng Hong Yang 21-16, 15-21, 21-18 to set up a second round clash against Hong Kong's Cheuk Yiu Lee, who dashed the hopes of World No.12 Sen. The eighth seeded Sen looked a pale shadow of himself as he failed to match the level of his rival, losing 18-21, 11-21 to bow out of the men's singles competition.
Also Read: Lakshya Sen gets Matthews to help him at All England Championships
But Mithun Manjunath registered a straight-game 21-8, 21-17 win over Joran Kweekel of Netherlands to sail into the men's singles pre-quarterfinals. The women's doubles pair of Sikki Reddy and Arathi Sara Sunil also crashed out in the opening round, losing 12-21, 14-21 against Japan's Sayaka Hobara and Yui Suizu.
ALSO READ
"Lakshya Sen is going to Austria to do some physical assessment": Vimal Kumar
Padukone took away Sen’s phone in Paris
"Few keep watching reels": Modi opens up on athletes using phones during Games
"Soldiers of the 2036 Olympics": PM Modi hails Paris Games' Indian contingent
The castigating by Prakash Padukone to Lakshya Sen should have been private
But the celebrated men's doubles pair of Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty meant business as the second seeded India pair defeated Malaysian combination of Xin Yuan Boon and Tien Ci Wong 21-15, 21-18 to book their place in the pre-quarterfinals.
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever